I’ve been writing a novel for the best part of a year and a half, which sounds very grand doesn’t it? I mean, nobody has asked for it, and I have no idea whether anyone will want it, but I’m sure you’ll agree that ‘novel’ sounds so much better than ‘a very long Word doc I cry about sometimes’.
One thing I’ve realised throughout what Lord Sugar would call ‘the process’ is that everything that happens in a story has to drive it forward. That’s not easy if, like me, you have a tendency to wang on about a character’s traits rather than showing them through action.
Anyway, it turns out that if you do that, you end up with a lot of people looking in mirrors to tell the reader what their hair colour is – and a plot that’s about as taut as a swimming pool noodle.
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I bet that kind of thing doesn’t bother award-winning playwright Dennis Kelly, though. He’s an absolute master of the art of ‘show, don’t tell’. In Pulling, co-written with Sharon Horgan, he summed up the entire relationship between Horgan’s character and her idiot boyfriend Karl with a single momentary glimpse of him in a mirrored bathroom cabinet, washing his arse with a flannel.
Kelly does it again in the first 30 seconds of Waiting for the Out. Dan, the extremely nervy protagonist, is on the phone discussing his upcoming teaching job in a prison. He asks whether there’s a Pret nearby, while intensely checking that all the knobs on the cooker are set to ‘off’. And bam, we are indeed, off.